They all look the same to me, and I can communicate with other Lemmy users so what’s the point? (I don’t know anything about Lemmy lol I just joined)

  • Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    For the most part, it doesn’t matter. Although there are some instances that choose not to communicate with each other.

    Instances that promote disinformation and hate speech often get blocked. More over, instances that have vulnerable people are selective about who they federate with.

  • s_s@lemmy.one
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    2 years ago

    It’s like having different email providers.

    They will all send and receive email, although some might try to cut down on spam by blocking email from other specific providers.

    Also, certain providers will host different email newsgroups (ie communities, ie “subreddits”)

  • takeda@kbin.social
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    2 years ago

    The difference is different admins, different policy (for example one lemmy could let anyone in, another, like beehaw asks to write why they should let you in, and that you will obey their rules).

    There are also things like some settings, for example beehaw disables downvotes, they also don’t federate with lemmy servers that notoriously break their policies.

    So best bet would be to choose server which policy fits you the best.

    Also some people might want to choose the biggest and most open server. That could be good but because the server is open to everyone it might struggle fighting abuse and also go down because of high load. Such server is lemmy.world right now.

    BTW: this might be useful https://github.com/maltfield/awesome-lemmy-instances

  • ijeff@lemdro.id
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    2 years ago

    That’s the beauty of it! Just like email, it doesn’t really matter which provider you sign up through. It gives you choice.

    However, some instances do de-federate from other ones meaning you wouldn’t be able to see any content from communities hosted on them nor anything posted by their users.

      • CandleTiger@programming.dev
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        2 years ago

        This is an excellent case in point — for most instances there kind of just, somebody felt like making an instance and here it is. If you don’t know anybody specifically there’s not much reason to pick one over another. Maybe in future somebody will start up commercial instances like email providers and charge extra to have better reliability or a cool name or whatever but so far the instances seem to be pretty much run for the sake of neighborly kindness and fun.

        Some instances have enough of a special interest that they get a distinct identity and reputation.

        If you go look at what’s posted/hosted locally on the hexbear instance you’ll see it’s got a shit-ton of general trolling, shit-disturbing, lib-pwning, and general 4chan activity. If that’s your jam, you can sign up there and have a “local” feed with that kind of content, concentrated.

        Meanwhile I’ve seen a number of calls to defederate from hexbear recently and if you sign up there you will not see or interact with whomever is posting from those instances who say no to trolling.

        • Frub@lemm.eeOP
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          2 years ago

          Is there an opportunity for ad monetization as a commercial instance? Because so far I haven’t seen any

          • CandleTiger@programming.dev
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            2 years ago

            I was talking about charging subscription fees for the instance login, not ads. I imagine if you wanted to fork lemmy and change it to inflict ads on your instance users you could do that, too.

            I’m not thinking it’s an awesome business proposition right now, but if the fediverse gets big enough that users are willing to pay for Enterprise Reliability™ then I could see it happening.

            It used to be that you could self-host your email server or use your cool friend’s server. But these days almost everybody uses commercial hosting. I see lemmy and mastodon going the same way if they grow enough.